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Posted March 31, 2017, 1:05 am
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Spieth believes he’s exorcised the demon at No. 12

  • Article Photos
    Spieth believes he’s exorcised the demon at No. 12
    Photos description
    Jordan Spieth lost his final-round Masters lead at No. 12 last year, hitting two balls into the water and finishing with quadruple bogey. It ended his chance at consecutive victories. On his first visit back to the course in December, he made two birdies on the par-3 hole. Now he’s hoping to put the matter behind him for good with his performance in this week’s tournament, good or bad.
  • Article Photos
    Spieth believes he’s exorcised the demon at No. 12
    Photos description
    Jordan Spieth lost his final-round Masters lead at No. 12 last year, hitting two balls into the water and finishing with quadruple bogey. It ended his chance at consecutive victories. On his first visit back to the course in December, he made two birdies on the par-3 hole. Now he’s hoping to put the matter behind him for good with his performance in this week’s tournament, good or bad.
  • Article Photos
    Spieth believes he’s exorcised the demon at No. 12
    Photos description
    Jordan Spieth lost his final-round Masters lead at No. 12 last year, hitting two balls into the water and finishing with quadruple bogey. It ended his chance at consecutive victories. On his first visit back to the course in December, he made two birdies on the par-3 hole. Now he’s hoping to put the matter behind him for good with his performance in this week’s tournament, good or bad.
  • Article Photos
    Spieth believes he’s exorcised the demon at No. 12
    Photos description
    Jordan Spieth lost his final-round Masters lead at No. 12 last year, hitting two balls into the water and finishing with quadruple bogey. It ended his chance at consecutive victories. On his first visit back to the course in December, he made two birdies on the par-3 hole. Now he’s hoping to put the matter behind him for good with his performance in this week’s tournament, good or bad.

Jordan Spieth believes once the 2017 Masters is over, everyone’s memory of the back-nine meltdown that cost him a second consecutive green jacket in 2016 will go with it.

Not so, said Rory McIlroy, who flamed out on the back nine in 2011 while leading the Masters and finished in a tie for 15th.

“It’s not as if it’s going to be the last year he gets questions about it,” McIlroy said. “That might be the way he’s approaching it, the mentality of I just can’t wait for this to be over.

“I still get questioned about the back nine at Augusta in 2011,” said McIlroy, who shot 43 on the his way to 80. “It’s just something you have to deal with. It’s something that happened. It’s not going to go away. It’s there and it always will be.”

McIlroy said if Spieth “doesn’t banish those demons or win this year, the questions will always still be there.”

Spieth said he knows a lot of eyes will be on him this year to see whether he has conquered any remaining demons from 2016.

“No matter what happens at this year’s Masters, whether I can grab the jacket back or I miss the cut or I finish 30th, it will be nice having this Masters go by,” Spieth said in late March. “The Masters lives on for a year. It brings a non-golf audience into golf. And it will be nice once this year’s finished, from my point of view, to be brutally honest with you.”

Spieth, 23, will be watched closely on the par-3 12th hole when he plays the practice rounds. Then, all eyes will be on him in the first round when his score will count and he’ll find out whether he has any mental scars left from 2016 on the hole known as Golden Bell.

It was there, on the second leg of Amen Corner, that Spieth put two balls in the water and emerged with a quadruple bogey 7, losing a lead that had reached five shots after nine holes. He shot 5-over-par 41 for 73 and finished tied for second, three shots behind Danny Willett.

Speith thinks he exorcised “the demon” of No. 12 when he rolled in a 15-footer for birdie on his first visit back in De­cember.

“I was like, there was no chance I was leaving this short,” he said. “I was pumped to hit the green, and then I hit my putt and it just about stopped short on the front lip and fell in for two. I probably gave like a big fist pump. I was walking around with my hands up, like the demon’s gone.

“We played it the next morning and I hit a 9-iron this time to a left pin, and it landed about 3 feet beyond the hole and it was really, really soft, and it sucked back and almost went in, right on the lip to about this far. So I got two twos out of No. 12 the first time back.”

Spieth was so excited with his first birdie at No. 12 that he couldn’t wait to call his caddie, Michael Greller, after he got off the course.

“I was like, ‘Michael, you’re going to want to hear this; that on 12 tee, I birdied, it was cool.’ ”

It’s no secret that cameras are up in the trees around Amen Corner; one can be seen near the 12th tee.

Before he left in December, Spieth asked Masters Chair­man Billy Payne for the footage of the birdies.

With his Masters record, Spieth can’t wait to get back to Augusta National. In three starts, he’s won and finished second twice. Through the third round last year, he had led a record seven consecutive rounds.

“I’m sure he’ll have a great chance to win again this year,” McIlroy said.

“The focus when you look at goals for the year is on four weeks of the year, highest goals,” Spieth said. “The first one coming up is in April. So pick a schedule, pick a plan within each part of your game on and off the course that’s going to best prepare us to peak for those weeks. And it’s been very successful the last couple years. So certainly right now, our focus is right on the Masters and doing what we can ahead of time in order to prepare for it.”

Spieth has already won on the PGA Tour this season, at Pebble Beach, for his ninth title. He also won the Australian Open in late 2016.

“We believe that we have the firepower and the mind to close the deal, so it’s just about getting back, wherever it may be,” he said of the majors. “Certainly the focus is on the Masters right now.”

Early Successes

Ralph Guldahl and Jordan Spieth are the only two golfers to finish in either first or second place in their first three Masters tournament appearances. Here is a closer look:

Ralph Guldahl 

1937: 2nd place Ralph Guldahl was leading Byron Nelson by four shots heading into the final round in his first appearance. Then came Nos. 12 and 13: Guldahl went 5-6 while Nelson went 2-3 to take the lead and the win.

1938: 2nd place Henry Picard held a one-stroke lead heading into the fourth round, then played the front nine in 32 to win by two shots over Guldahl and Harry Cooper.

1939: Winner A second-nine 33 helped lead Guldahl to a one-stroke victory over Sam Snead. His four-round total of 279 was not bettered until 1953.

 

Jordan Spieth 

2014: 2nd Place In his first Masters appearance, Jordan Spieth entered the final round tied for the lead with Bubba Watson. Then, Spieth bogeyed Nos. 8 and 9 while Watson birdied each to take the lead for good and win.

2015: Winner Spieth went wire-to-wire in his second appearance to win by four shots. His final 270 matched Tiger Woods’ 18-year-old scoring record.

2016: 2nd place Leading after three rounds, a costly bogey-bogey-quadruple bogey run on Nos. 10, 11 and 12 on Sunday opened the door for eventual winner Danny Willett.